I hope I don't confuse things by saying this but it appears that you can use the analogue inputs on your Alesis monitors at the same time as the USB input. So it would be possible to continue to use your Alesis speakers via USB for all the home entertainment stuff while sending them an analogue output from the Focusrite when you are using them for recording.

- I've now disconnected the USB cable from the Alesis speakers and connected them via jack cables to the Scarlett. - In Windows I've made the Scarlett the default i/o device for rec. and playback.- I've restarted the PC.- I now have no sound at all: no input mon. and no recorded playback - thought the live input is reaching Reaper.- I tried fiddling with the "routing presets" in MixControl, to no avail.

You're on the right way. The USB speakers have left and right jack input, right? They are, of course, powered up? The headphones should work fine even if you the monitors don't, so it's very likely to be a simple setting, like volume all the way down or outputs muted. Headphone monitor level is up and not muted? If you have more than one output, have you told the interface where to send the sound (i.e. to where you have connected the jacks)?

Start with windows sound settings and forget reaper for a moment.

Do you have the volume level up? In sound settings you can test the playback level. If you right click your sound icon (on the taskbar) where's the volume?

James Perrett wrote:I hope I don't confuse things by saying this but it appears that you can use the analogue inputs on your Alesis monitors at the same time as the USB input.

Hi James, a couple of other people said that this was the cause of my problems, which is why I tried the rewire (see above). But I'm still all ears.

You can, but best to start up simple and go a step at a time.

Since you have experience of connecting analog equipment, do realize there's nothing different with a PC - you still need "cables" and devices to move the audio from here to there - only some of them will be digital, i.e. moving data inside different software parts in the computer instead of having voltage differences over a physical cable.

Conceptually there's nothing different - a signal still has to go from A to B thru a series of devices - only some devices are software components running in Windows)

Probably best to ignore my suggestion for now until you've got things working.

I can't see your older posts but have you tried playing a CD player or MP3 player through the speakers to check that the analogue inputs are working?

If the speakers are working then you'll need to get to grips with the Focusrite software control panel and make sure that you are sending audio where you think you are. The control panel on my Focusrite interface is a triumph of style over function and the outputs sometimes stop working for no apparent reason but I would have hoped that things have improved with more recent interfaces. On mine you can either have separate headphone mixes on outputs 5 and 6 or send outputs 1 and 2 to the headphones and the only way to tell how this is set up is looking at a tiny little button.

Sometimes when I have real problems with routing I'll set up a project that sends the signal to all outputs - something that is fairly easy in Reaper.

"The control panel on my Focusrite interface is a triumph of style over function..."Well, I'm glad I'm not the only one who's less than impressed with Focusrite's s/w interface: my version of MixCtl won't even resize to full-screen, so there's no point in doing a screenshot.

Sorry, just to iterate: the keyboard signal is reaching the Reaper channel, no probs. On the Scarlett, I also have headphones attached, but there's nowt cumming owt, as that coach from Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner would say.

FrankF wrote:Sorry, just to iterate: the keyboard signal is reaching the Reaper channel, no probs. On the Scarlett, I also have headphones attached, but there's nowt cumming owt, as that coach from Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner would say.

That's an obvious sign of incorrect routing. Can you put in dropbox a screenshot of your software mixer and post it?

And if you look at the simpler windows Sound Settings, and try to test the levels, do you hear anything? (I guess not but just in case):

Are you getting any movement on the meters in MixControl at all? Either for inputs or any of the output channels? And in Reaper, have you got the routing for the master fader set to send an output to your hardware? Nothing there's been accidentally muted or anything like that? This is tricky to do remotely without any screenshots. Don't suppose you're a TeamViewer user? Or any other screensharing technology?

I had similar issues figuring out the Focusrite mixer, I just called Focusrite, they are very approachable, and in the UK! customer service is "just like it used to be" in the good old days.They just talked me through the initial set-up, and it worked fine after that.Maybe worth a go...

blinddrew wrote:Are you getting any movement on the meters in MixControl at all? Either for inputs or any of the output channels? And in Reaper, have you got the routing for the master fader set to send an output to your hardware? Nothing there's been accidentally muted or anything like that? This is tricky to do remotely without any screenshots. Don't suppose you're a TeamViewer user? Or any other screensharing technology?

Yep, the meters are full of life in MixCtrl, the last 4 meters on the right.

Arpangel wrote:I had similar issues figuring out the Focusrite mixer, I just called Focusrite, they are very approachable, and in the UK! customer service is "just like it used to be" in the good old days.They just talked me through the initial set-up, and it worked fine after that.Maybe worth a go... :?:

I should've thought of that earlier! I'll give them a ring, and if anything interesting comes of it, I'll post it here.